Asbestos-Fiber Exploration And Production Forecasts By Core Drilling, Jeffrey Mine, Asbestos, Quebec

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 9
- File Size:
- 1526 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1946
Abstract
THE Jeffrey mine of the Canadian Johns-Manville Co., Limited, is in the town of Asbestos, situated approximately 100 miles northeast of Montreal and about the same distance southwest of Quebec, in Richmond County, Quebec. Mining operations were started in 1881 on outcrops on a hill, as a side-hill cut, followed by a second and third cut. This development was the forerunner of the present large open-pit operations, the mine now ranking as the largest openpit asbestos mine in the world. Operations were first carried on by hand, then by horsepower and later by stem cableways. By 1924 the derrick spans, 2000 ft. or more long, became unwieldy. To overcome this, and also to eliminate hand labor as much as possible, steam shovels and railroad haulage were introduced. The steam shovels were replaced in 1928 by larger electric shovels of the full-revolving type. THE ORE BODY The ore body is a serpentinized peridotite rock mass. The chrysotile fibers form a network of veins throughout, varying from microscopic width to two or more inches measured across the veins (Fig. I). These veins may be continuous for a few or many feet; they may increase or decrease in width within a few feet. The veins in which the fibers occur perpendicular to the veins are known as cross fiber. Those in which the fibers lay parallel to the veins are known as slip fiber. The cross fibers are of better quality, and more in demand. The majority of the fiber [ ]
Citation
APA:
(1946) Asbestos-Fiber Exploration And Production Forecasts By Core Drilling, Jeffrey Mine, Asbestos, QuebecMLA: Asbestos-Fiber Exploration And Production Forecasts By Core Drilling, Jeffrey Mine, Asbestos, Quebec. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1946.